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- 173 - EVALUATION OF FUNGICIDES FOR SUPPRESSING ALTERNARIA LEAF BLIGHT OF CARROT D. B. Langston, Jr. University of Georgia Cooperative Extension Department of Plant Pathology Tifton, GA 31793 dlangsto@uga.
The Commercial Vegetable Production Guides are a source of information on producing vegetables crops in the Pacific Northwest, particulary in Oregon. They include information on varieties, fertilizer applications, harvesting, handling, storage, pest control, and other cultural practices, as well as
eneldo GARDENMOSAICS www.gardenmosaics.org GARDENMOSAICS www.gardenmosaics.org LA FAMILIA DE LA ZANAHORIA Página de ciencias APIACEAE (OR UMBELLIFEREAE) El nombre Umbellifereae se deriva de una palabra en latín que signica umbroso, que tiene sombra o la causa.
Guo-Qing Tanga, Marcel Lüscherb, and Arnd Sturma a Friedrich Miescher Institute, Maulbeerstrasse 66, CH-4058 Basel, Switzerland b Botanical Institute, University of Basel, Hebelstrasse 1, CH-4056 Basel, Switzerland
This electronic document was downloaded from the GPO web site, August 2002, and is provided for information purposes only. The Code of Federal Regulations, Title 21, is updated each year in early summer.
bstract In a field experiment with a susceptible population of annual wild carrot (Daucus carota) from Iran, artificial inoculations with the fungal pathogen A. dauci led to a strong and very significant increase of the diseased leaf area.
Although wild carrot has a long, tough taproot, the only true similarity to domestic carrot is its finely branched, "lace-like" foliage. Wild carrot is a biennial and forms a flat, many branched rosette during its first year.
Somatic heart- and torpedo-stage embryos of the domesticated carrot, Daucus carota L., were severed at their midlengths to produce two halves termed apical and basal pieces. These pieces may be grafted or kept separate.